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Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Guest Blog: The Uncovering by Jes Young

UFI welcomes Jess Young Author of The Uncovering. Thanks for Joining us!!

Omens, Superstitions, & Myth

I recently I came across this review of my book, The Uncovering,

“Loved it… but I don’t get the starlings??”– Gina* via GoodReads
review

I completely understand why Gina didn’t get the starlings. To be honest, when
I wrote them into the story – long after the first draft was already complete –
even I wasn’t exactly sure what they were doing there. At first, they were just
set dressing, but then a little research turned up a lot of information about
superstitions, omens and folklore about them and I realized their presence in
the story could provide more than a creepy / cool visual.

Here are some of the things I discovered:

• Starlings are widely considered to be messengers of change and
transformation. In The Uncovering, the starlings start following Tab
around just as her life is about to undergo tremendous change.• When a
starling shrills, it means a stranger is coming to your door. In the book,
the person at the door – more like up against it – is Alex, the Elvish prince
who Tab has unknowingly been betrothed to since birth.• In Celtic legend
they are related to Fae magic. The murders of her sisters brings Tab’s
hidden Elvish heritage to light at the beginning of the book.

Afterwards I realized that without knowing I was doing it, I had incorporated
some of the most prevalent superstitions about starlings into the story.
Coincidence or divine intervention? Starlings are also known to carry messages
from the Gods.

So Gina*, if you’re reading this, I want you to know that who and what the
starlings are will be completely explained in The Delving, book two in
the Twilight and Dawn series, which should be out sometime over the summer.

Here are some of the other omens and superstitions I dug up while researching
starlings:

• A bird in the house is means bad luck.
• Although it probably won’t
feel that way when it happens, having bird droppings land on your head means
good luck.
• If a bird flies through your house, it means important news is
coming. If it can’t get out, someone will die. If the bird flies toward you, you
should probably think about getting your affairs in order.
• Finding a dead
crow on the road is good luck (obviously not for the crow).
• In Wales, it’s
considered good luck if two crows cross your path but in New England it’s bad
luck to see two crows flying together.
• A lark that won’t look at you, a
robin that taps on your window, and a plover’s call are all signs of death.
•
Owls, peacock feathers, and a single magpie are all unlucky omens. Ten magpies,
however mean a time of perfect bliss.
• If a raven perches on a house in
Wales, it will bring prosperity. If you see one circling a home in Scotland,
someone who lives there will die.
• The gull forecasts happiness or the
death of a loved one (probably not at the same time).
• Sparrows mean bad
luck for lovers.

I’m not especially superstitious although I do throw salt over my left
shoulder if I’ve spilled it and avoid walking under ladders. What about you?
What superstitions do you believe in?

Oh, on a side note, if you’ve never seen a murmuration of starlings in
flight, click the link for an amazing video of a huge murmuration shot by wild
life cameraman and travel journalist Dylan Winter. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eakKfY5aHmY.

Many thanks to Stacy for having me over. I really appreciate the chance to
talk about my work with you and your readers. If anybody has any comments or
questions, let’s hear them! I’ll check in to answer throughout the day.

__________________________________

Jes Young was a copywriter at Random House for eight years
before leaving the job she loved to be a full time mom. She holds a BFA in
creative writing from Emerson College.

She writes Urban Fantasy and Paranormal Romance because, in spite of a
complete lack of supporting evidence, Jes still believes in fairy tales, happy
endings, and true love.

Tab Bennett is normal —
unusually, excessively normal. Her job as a bank teller is safe and
secure, her grandfather finally let her move out of the house (at least
to the cottage at the end of the driveway), and her fiance fiercely
guards her chastity, whether she wants him to or not.

It's
something of a shock, then, when Tab learns that she is the elvish queen
of the fabled kingdom of the Inbetween. Also shocking is the appearance
of the staggeringly confident and gorgeous elvish warrior who claims to
be Tab's true betrothed. Even amidst a steamy love triangle, Tab must
tell friend from foe in an unknown world of danger, deceit, magic, and
sex.

The first in the Underneath and Inbetween trilogy, The Uncovering sparkles with wit and unadulterated fun.

__________________________________

EXCERPT

That night I had a dream that Nicholas and I were walking through the deep
woods. He had his hands over my eyes so I had to trust him for every step. We
moved slowly and close together but he wasn’t keeping me captive and I wasn’t
struggling to get away. We were just taking a walk together; there was no reason
to be afraid.

“Watch your step,” he whispered.

Without my eyes, my other senses seemed stronger. I could hear the trees
swaying in the breeze, whispering secrets to the sky. I could smell the
festering of leaves that would soon turn to new earth. I could hear animals
growl and snap as they tracked their prey through the undergrowth. I could feel
a sheen of moisture, damp and close, clinging to my skin, molding the long gown
I wore to the curves of my body. I shivered though I was neither frightened nor
cold.

“There’s a branch,” he cautioned. “Duck.” Gently, he tucked my head and I
slipped under it. I giggled, enjoying the game.

“Are we almost there?” I asked.

“Nearly. The tree we’re looking for is deep in the deepest woods. It’s a
secret tree. But I’ll show it to you.”

“You won’t let me fall?”

let me fall, let me fall

“What is that? Who’s there?” I felt the brush of feathers against my cheek.

“It’s nothing, just the starlings,” Nicholas answered. “Ignore them.”

He guided me deeper into the woods. I could hear the starlings landing on the
branches above my head, feel the wind from each flap of their wings, smell the
sweetness of berries on their breath.

“Where are you taking me again?”

“I’m taking you to find your sister.”

find your sister, find your sister the starlings called

“Rivers isn’t lost. Rivers is dead.”

“I heard.”

When he took his hands away from my eyes, I could see everything, all the
beauty and terror of the forest, all the wonder of ordinary things transformed
by moonlight and shadow. I wanted to stop and take it all in but Nicholas was
anxious to keep moving. Deeper and deeper and darker and darker, I followed him
until we came to the place we’d been searching for.

The tree stood alone in a clearing. It wasn’t especially tall but nothing
grew above it, leaving it bare to the sky and stars. It was wide and old and
gnarled with symbols cut deep into its bark. Its branches stretched out instead
of up, reaching toward us, circling the tree like a spiral staircase.

“This is the tree of stairs,” Nicholas explained. “If you say the right
words, it will take you Underneath.”

Faint though it was, the sound of tapping woke me out of the dream. I turned
toward the window, half expecting to see Nicholas’ pale face on the other side
of the glass. Instead it was a starling, his ruby red eye a pinpoint of light in
the early morning darkness.

“Go away,” I said.

The bird kept tapping, looking at me, waiting for a response.

“My sister isn’t lost, you creepy thing.” I knocked against the glass and he
flew away, rejoining the swirl of starlings flying around in my front yard.
Another bird broke free of the formation to take his place. It started tapping,
too.

“Go away.” I knocked on the window again but this bird was made of tougher
stuff than the other. Every time I knocked, he tapped back. “I don’t know what
you want. My sister is dead.”

The flock changed direction mid-flight and flew to the edge of the woods,
settling on the trees there. The bird on my windowsill tapped twice more against
the glass.

“You are freaking me out, little bird. Please leave me alone.” He tapped
again. “What do you want? Do you want to come in?” I asked. He tilted his head
in that eerie way that all birds do and blinked at me.

“Do you want me to come out?” I asked.

He tapped twice.

“Yeah, I’ll just bet you do.”

We both stayed by the window, the bird and me, until sunrise. Then he flew
away with the other members of his flock. I told George as soon as he got out of
bed.

“You should have woken me,” he said. “What else did they say?”

“They didn’t say anything.” It seemed ridiculous to me to get worked up over
some birds – even if they were tapping on my window and visiting me in dreams,
they were just birds. “Well one of them may have indicated that he wanted me to
go outside.”

“He said that?”

“He didn’t say anything because he was a bird. But he tapped on the window
when I asked if he wanted me to come out.”

“That wasn’t a bird, it was a Harbinger.”

“A Harbinger of what?” I asked. “You better not say doom.”

“Not doom,” George laughed, “change. The starlings means change is coming to
you, one part of your life is over and another part is about to begin.”